emmdoubleew, I can't agree with any of the proofs you use. The first assumes you can multiply an abstraction like .999.... with a real number.
Hi,
This is a very interesting debate and I had to participate.
First, let's make it very clear that we are in the realm of math and absolutely must abide by its rules. Surely we can all agree on this point, since .999... and 1.000... are purely mathematical numbers.
If .999... is not a real number, then how come it's obviously less than 2 and greater than zero? According to mathematics, the number .999... is indeed part of the set of all real numbers. May I also remind you that the number 1 also has an infintely repeating amounts of 0 after it: 1.0000... and so on. This is true for absolutlely all numbers.
The second shows that the limit of the series used to give .999.. approaches 1, which I'll readily conceed.
Actually it doesn't, that would barely take two steps. It does use convergence, but I don't think you fully understood the proof, which is quite OK, but keep an open mind.
The third once again uses .1111... as a number instead of an abstraction.
.111... is mentioned nowhere in the third proof

. In any case, just because it has an infinite amount of digits after the decimal point doesnt not make it any less of a number. Are you denying that Pi is a number? Surely you wouldn't want to do that, as it's necessary to multiply it by the diameter to find the circumference of a circle.

The last one I think fundamentally misinterprets what a limit(or convergence) is about. As you take the function f(x)=1/x to infinity, it gets infinitely close to f(x)=0, but I doubt you'd be silly enough to claim that f(infinity)=0. As I said before, infinity is only a nice and convenient concept. .9999... doesn't exist except as an abstraction.
Yes you are right, but we are not talking about 1/x, 1/x has only one limit, while .9 + .09 + .009 ... has two limits (1 and .999...), which is impossible! Hence they must be the same.
I think emmdoubleew put it very nicely:
"All numbers are concepts. Some numbers, like 1, have stronger links to reality than others, but we are looking at mathematics here, not the real world. If you're going to throw away numbers which can't concretely exist, then you're throwing away pi, e, i, zero, and, frankly, almost all of mathematics."
So this whole thread is about 0.999... and 1 being the same number?
well, as you can see its clearly not. Claiming that they are the same is stating something that there is no answer to, because no matter how many decimals you put after the comma, you can always put one more...and then 1 more...and then a million more...so bascally you are just rounding off 0.99... to be 1, two different numbers. yes they are close, insanely unbelievably close, but they are still different. Im gonna get yelled at now
Sorry 
Hi nicco, I like that you are thinking about infinity! Such a hard concept to grasp. Yes, if you kept adding 9 after the decimal point, you would get closer and closer to 1, but there is already an infinite amount of 9s after the decimal point, so you are already there!
Here's the original post:
that .999... and 1 are the same number
They are not! If you want to round it off to "1" that's fine with me.
.999........ no matter how far it's extended it's still going to come up short from "1".
John 
Hi John,
I see your thinking but it is actually fallacious. You cannot extend .999... because it already extended to infinity, hence already "at" 1. .999... is static, not a series on which you keep adding 9s. Hope this helps you understand

Also, since we are talking about math, it would help if you could provide a mathematical proof that they are not the same instead of speaking on such abstract terms. Good luck though, because you won't find one.
So in the end .999~ is trying to express 1 but it will fail in practice because you cannot do something infinitely. .999~ is just a stupid flawed way of writing 1.
It's silly, but far from flawed. People simply cannot accept what confuses them. And that's okay, only they tend to keep a closed mind.
I hope I clarified a few things.
- Monsieur le Renard